Funnily enough, it’s only as my Bière de Garde is reaching what I’d normally call the “end” of fermentation (1.010) that I’ve learned about this aspect of diastaticus-positive yeast (I’m using WY-3711). Hmmm.
Wyeast published some a report a few years ago titled “understanding diastaticus” but it’s clearly aimed at commercial breweries, and also sounds very much like it’s designed to limit their legal risk rather than anything else. Basically they say issues in packaging can come from ‘a single cell’ of D-positive yeast… and that the gene is present in wild strains anyhow, which as home brewers we can expect to be swirling around and landing in our FVs pretty much any time.
I think I’ll just give the FV and tap a good dose of VWP after brewing, and mark it as ‘used for Saison’. I must also remember to boil the fittings of the Corny when the beer is finished :-)
I made many beers in a plastic fermenter with Belgian and saison strains before the var diastaticus gene was understood, and they didn't infect other beers with normal cleaning and sanitising.
Brett is a different case, but your regular saccharomyces yeasts should not be feared.